THEATERMANIA: When did you know you wanted to direct?FRANCESCA ZAMBELLO: From a pretty early age. I was the kind of kid who got together the local neighborhood kids and I wrote, costumed and directed whatever story we invented. Clearly, I did not even know I was actually directing, but it was that sense of storytelling and drawing people together that was in my DNA. By high school, I was directing plays, and in college I started an alternative theater group to be able to direct things the university theater did not want to present.

TM: After you initially read the book for The First Wives Club and listened to the songs what was your emotional response? And how did you proceed after you took on the project?FZ: When I came onboard, there were only a few songs written in response to the idea of a musical. They were powerful, captivating, and generated a real visceral response. They spoke to the emotions of the heart and had the Motown groove, which make characters want to physicalize their stories. Then Rupert Holmes joined the project to write the book and we worked with the composers, Brian Holland, Lamont Dozier, and Eddie Holland to shape the piece. It became clear to us that we needed to use the film and novel as inspiration, but also we had to make the story speak, not as a period piece, but as a contemporary story. We did not want to parrot the film. For example, setting the story for today made us revamp the performer character, Elyse Elliot, so she became a woman of color who was a big R&B star. Once we knew the characters and had settled on the structure, I evolved a fluid physical landscape to set our story that would evoke the architecture of New York City without being slavishly naturalistic.

TM: Working on a world premiere musical takes Olympian efforts. During the final stretch, such as after the final dress rehearsal and before the first preview, what do you reflect upon?FZ: There is no time for reflection as there is a constant list on a yellow pad to be done. This time is pure anxiety.

TM: What was the process like transferring the story of Little House on the Prairie from a book and a wildly popular television program to musical theater?FZ: Like developing all musicals, it was long, arduous, hard, challenging, frustrating, and joyous.

TM What opera projects await you?FZ: I am completing the Ring Cycle at the Kennedy Center and the San Francisco Opera over the next two years, and this fall, I am directing a charming unknown opera and ballet by Tchaikovsky called The Tsarina's Slippers at the Royal Opera House.